Gas-Phase Chemistry of NH x Cl y+. 1. Structure, Stability, and

Mark S. Rayson , Mohammednoor Altarawneh , John C. Mackie , Eric M. Kennedy and Bogdan Z. Dlugogorski. The Journal of Physical Chemistry A 2010 114 (7...
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J. Phys. Chem. A 1998, 102, 10189-10194

10189

Gas-Phase Chemistry of NHxCly+. 1. Structure, Stability, and Reactivity of Protonated Monochloramine Andreina Ricci* Dipartimento di Studi di Chimica e Tecnologia delle Sostanze Biologicamente AttiVe, UniVersita` di Roma “La Sapienza”, P.le A. Moro, 5 00185 Rome, Italy

Marzio Rosi Istituto per le Tecnologie Chimiche e Centro di Studi CNR “Calcolo IntensiVo in Scienze Molecolari”, UniVersita` di Perugia, 06100 Perugia, Italy ReceiVed: July 16, 1998; In Final Form: September 22, 1998

The structure and the reactivity of gaseous NH3Cl+ ions obtained from direct protonation of aqueous monochloramine by CI/CH4 and from ionization of a Cl2 plasma containing trace amounts of ammonia have been investigated by FT-ICR mass spectrometry. The results characterized the NH3Cl+ ions arising from both experiments as having the NH3-Cl+ structure, consistent with the results of MO SCF calculations pointing to the higher basicity of the nitrogen than the chlorine atom of NH2Cl. The gas-phase basicity of monochloramine has been estimated to be 761 ( 5 kJ mol-1 from bracketing experiments according to the procedure based on the relationship between the efficiency and the standard free-energy difference of proton transfer. This value is consistent with those from theoretical calculations at the B3LYP and CCSD(T)/6311++G(3df,3pd) level. In agreement with the protonation site, the NH3Cl+ ions behave as a protonating and chlorinating agent but addition is also observed.

Introduction Monochloramine, NH2Cl, is the prototypal member of a class of compounds that includes over 1000 organic molecules containing the N-Cl group in addition to inorganic species, such as dichloro- and trichloroamine. Apart from their intrinsic fundamental interest, chloramines find a variety of applications as bleachers, disinfectants, detergents, cleansers, etc.1 Monochloramine itself is an important reagent in organic synthesis and is widely used as a water disinfecting agent. Owing to the great variety of applications, the chemistry of N-chloroamines, in particular of NH2Cl, has received a great deal of attention in solution and, more generally, in the condensed phase.2-6 In contrast, apart from its preparation from the reaction of Cl2 and NH3,7 little is known about the gas-phase chemistry of NH2Cl, largely owing to the explosive nature of gaseous, undiluted chloramine and the frequent explosions caused by its attempted distillation.8 Only a few studies of the gas-phase ion chemistry of NH2Cl have been reported,9,10 including an investigation on the preparation of NH3Cl+ ions by protonation of the base under chemical ionization (CI) conditions, and its use as a chlorinating reagent.10 So far, to the best of our knowledge, no experimental studies of the two protomers

[H-NH2Cl]+ 1

[NH2Cl-H]+ 2

have been reported, and the gas-phase basicity (GB) and the proton affinity (PA) of chloramine have not been measured either, despite the fundamental importance of these thermo-

chemical data. Furthermore, no systematic survey of the manifold reactivity of protonated chloramine, which in principle can behave as a Brønsted acid, a chlorinating and an aminating agent, has been reported. In this study, we have investigated alternative preparation methods of protonated chloramine and its structure and reactivity and evaluated the GB and PA of NH2Cl by the joint application of FT-ICR mass spectrometry and theoretical techniques. Experimental Section All experiments were performed using an Apex TM 47e, FTICR spectrometer from Bruker Spectrospin AG equipped with an external ion source where protonated chloramine (MH+) was generated by positive CI utilizing CH4 as the reagent gas, at a pressure of ca. 10-4 Torr and a temperature of 150 °C. MH+ ions were transferred into the resonance cell (25 °C), and NH335Cl+ ions were isolated by broad-band and “single shots” ejection pulses. After thermalization by argon introduced by a pulsed valve and after a delay time of 1 s, the ions were re-isolated by “single shots” and allowed to react with the neutral molecules in the cell. The pressure of the neutrals was measured by a Bayard-Alpert ionization gauge, whose readings were calibrated utilizing the known rate coefficient of the CH4 + CH4+ f CH5+ + CH3• reaction as a reference.11 The readings were corrected for the relative sensitivity to the various gases utilized according to a standard method.12 The pseudo-first-order rate constants were obtained by plotting the logarithm of the NH335Cl+ intensities as a function of time. The bimolecular rate constants were then determined from the number density of the neutral molecules, deduced in turn from the pressure of the gas. Average dipole orientation (ADO) collision rate constants, kADO, were calculated as described by Su and Bowers.13 Reaction

10.1021/jp983051f CCC: $15.00 © 1998 American Chemical Society Published on Web 11/13/1998

10190 J. Phys. Chem. A, Vol. 102, No. 49, 1998

Ricci and Rosi

TABLE 1: Experimental and Theoretical GB and PA of Reference Basesb 1 CH3CHO C2H5NO2 CH2-CH2O HCOOCH3 CH3CH2CH2OH (CH3)2O CH3CH2CN (CH3)2CHOH (CH3)2CO C2H5OH

2

PA

GB

768.5 765.7 774.2 782.5 786.5 792.0 794.1 793.0 812.0 776.4

736.5 733.2 745.3 751.5 756.1 764.5 763.0 762.6 782.1 746

PA

3 GB

787.0

755.8

793.3

765.2b

810.4

780.3b

4

PA

GB

781 773 785 788 798 80.4 806 800 823 788

748.7b 740.5c 757.1c 756.8b 767.5c 776.2b 775.0b 769.6c 792.9b 757.6c

PA

5

6

GB

PA

GB

PA

GB

777

744.7b

770.2

737.9b

770.2

737.9b

792.4

761.2b

781.1

749.9b

782.2

751.0b

804.6 805.8

776.8b 774.0b

793.7

762.7b

792.0 793.5

764b 762.5b

830.1

799.9b

817.0

786.9b

811.9

781.8b

a All values are in kJ/mol. 1, from ref 29; 2, from ref 30; 3, from ref 23; 4, from ref 3; 5, from ref 32; 6, from ref 33. b GB(B) ) PA(B) + T[∆S°1/2(B) - S°(H+)] with T ) 300 K and S°(H+) ) 109 J/mol K. ∆S°1/2 from ref 33. c From T∆S from ref 29.

efficiencies are the ratio of experimental rate constants, kexp, to the collision rate constants, kADO. The uncertainty of each rate constant is estimated to be of about 30%. Chloramine was prepared in water solution by reaction of equimolecular amounts of ammonia with sodium hypochlorite.14 The pH of the solution was found to be critically important, since chloramine is the major product at pH > 8 but decomposes at pH > 10 whereas at low pH values formation of NCl3 can occur. Monochloramine was then directly distilled, together with water vapor, into the external ion source of the ICR spectrometer, removing traces of ammonia by a trap packed with anhydrous copper sulfate.15 Computational Details Density-functional theory, using the hybrid16 B3LYP functional,17 has been used to localize the stationary points of the systems investigated and to evaluate the vibrational frequencies. Single-point energy calculations at the optimized geometries were performed using the coupled-cluster single- and doubleexcitation method18 with a perturbational estimate of the tripleexcitations [CCSD(T)] approach.19 Zero-point energy corrections evaluated at the B3LYP level were added to the CCSD(T) energies. The 0 K total energies of the species of interest were corrected to 298 K by adding translational, rotational, and vibrational contributions. The absolute entropies were calculated by using standard statistical-mechanistic procedures from scaled harmonic frequencies and moments of inertia relative to B3LYP/6-311++G(3df,3pd) optimized geometries. The 6-311++G(3df,3pd) basis set20 has been used. All calculations were performed using Gaussian 94.21 Results and Discussion Experimental Evaluation of GB of NH2Cl. Most of the GB values listed in the literature were derived from the measurement of the equilibrium constant for the reversible proton-transfer reaction between the compound of interest and reference bases of known GB. If the equilibrium constant can be evaluated over a broad temperature range, both the ∆H° and ∆S° changes can be derived.22,23 This method requires accurate measurement not only of the ionic intensities but also of the concentrations of the neutral reagents in the cell. Analogously, application of the alternative approach based on the determination of Keq as the ratio of the forward and reverse rate constants24 presupposes the knowledge of the concentrations of the neutral reagents. The kinetic method proposed by Cooks et al.,25 based on the dissociation of proton-bound dimers, is of limited application

TABLE 2: Efficiencies and Rate Constants of Proton Transfer from NH3Cl+ to Reference Bases C2H5NO2 HCOOCH3 CH3CH2CH2OH C2H5OH (CH3)2O CH3CH2CN (CH3)2CHOH (CH3)2CO

Kexp (×10-9 molecules cm3 s-1)

eff%

0.013 ( 0.001 0.021 ( 0.005 0.024 ( 0.08 0.17 ( 0.02 0.65 ( 0.04 1.3 ( 0.2 1.4 ( 0.3 2.2 ( 0.6

0.5 1.3 1.4 10 43 45 77 100

under the conditions of FT-ICR experiments where such adducts are rarely observed. In our experiments, the presence of water, which evaporates together with chloramine from the aqueous solutions, precludes the possibility of determining the partial pressure of NH2Cl in the cell and, therefore, of utilizing equilibrium methods. Furthermore, no proton-bound dimers are observed, which precludes application of the kinetic method. This leaves, as the only viable alternative, the “bracketing” method23,26 where the GB is determined by measuring the efficiency of proton transfer from the ion investigated to bases of known GB. The efficiency, high for exoergic proton-transfer reaction, falls below the detection limit when passing to strongly endoergic processes and is low for reactions endoergic by 4-8 kJ mol-1. This behavior is common to bases with lone electron pairs as the basic center27 and to olefinic and aromatic bases with π electrons as the basic system.28 To evaluate the GB of monochloramine, NH3Cl+ ions, generated in the external ion source by the highly exothermic proton transfer from the CnH5+ ions (n ) 1,2) in CH4/CI, were allowed to react with bases of different strength in the resonance cell utilizing only bases with lone electron pairs as the basic center. Experimental and theoretical GB values of the reference bases available from the literature are reported in Table 1, whereas Table 2 summarizes the collisional efficiencies of proton-transfer reactions from NH3Cl+ to the reference bases measured as previously described. The efficiency is large (nearly 100%) in the case of CH3COCH3, decreases to values